Press Release – Skip Ink
Eagles legend, Glenn Frey — composer, song writer, lead vocalist, lyricist, responsible for 70s anthems by the Eagles and his global solo hits in the 80s – and his band will perform in two very special concerts in New Zealand in March, armed with a set list of iconic Eagles hits, his chartbusters from the 1980s, and a taste of his sixth solo album, After Hours.

A gifted songwriter and multi-talented artist with six number one albums, six Grammy Awards, five American Music Awards and two inductions into the Songwriters and Rock & Roll Halls of Fame, Glenn pioneered the Eagles’ harmonic California sound (along with Don Henley) and has writing, co-writing and performance credits on so many classics.

Glenn and Don formed the Eagles in 1971 and released their debut album in 1972. Since, the Eagles have sold over 120 million albums worldwide. As a solo artist and with the Eagles combined, Glenn has released 24 Top 40 singles on the Billboard Hot 100.Desperado, Hotel California, Best of My Love, I Can’t Tell You Why, Life in the Fast Lane, One of These Nights, The Long Run, New Kid In Town, Wasted Time, Lyin’ Eyes, Tequila Sunrise, Take It To The Limit, Heartache Tonight, Take It Easy, I Found Somebody, The One You Love, Smuggler’s Blues and soundtracks – The Heat Is On (Beverly Hills Cop), You Belong to the City (Miami Vice), Flip City (Ghostbusters II), Part of Me, Part of You (Thelma & Louise) and more.

This After Hours tour is your opportunity to wrap your arms around each other and revisit the best of times in the songs from the legend that is Glenn Frey, supported by New Zealand’s own chart-topping artist, Dane Rumble, in what promise to be two unforgettable concerts.

The After Hours album is out now through Universal Music New Zealand and iTunes.

In-depth Biography
Glenn Frey is best known as one of the two most popular and longest tenured members (along with Don Henley) of the Eagles, and as an intermittently successful solo artist in the decades since that band ceased being a full-time working group. Although associated closely with the Eagles’ brand of Southern California-spawned laid-back country-rock, Frey’s origins were a long way away from either the place or the music that his work came to epitomize. He was born in Detroit in 1948, and grew up in Royal Oak, Michigan. Music was just one of many interests that drove him during childhood — a precocious youth, he was an avid reader and, despite his relatively small stature, a serious athlete in elementary and junior high school. He also took piano lessons from age five — at the insistence of his parents — until just before his teen years. His interests in high school included such advanced and outre subjects for the time as the writings of Jack Kerouac and the films and image of actor James Dean, who died when Frey was seven years old; they reflected a rebellious and aggressive nature that also manifested itself in an attraction to rock & roll. The music had come along during Frey’s childhood — he was seven when “Rock Around the Clock” shot to number one on the charts, and eight when Elvis Presley became a national phenomenon. In contrast to his future bandmate Timothy B. Schmit, Frey was never a would-be folkie, but jumped right into rock & roll, especially after he saw — at age 16 — how girls reacted to rock stars on-stage.

He took up the guitar in earnest after seeing the Beatles perform in 1964, and passed through several amateur and semi-professional Detroit-based bands in his late teens, including the Mushrooms, who became a major local attraction on the local television show Robin Seymour’s Swinging Time, and appeared regularly at a teen club called the Hideout, as well as cutting a single, “Such a Lovely Child,” for Hideout Records (produced by a somewhat older, more advanced local rocker named Bob Seger). The Mushrooms split soon after, and Frey joined the folk-rock group the Four of Us; he subsequently formed two more Detroit teen bands, the Subterraneans and the Heavy Metal Kids. Frey attended college somewhat reluctantly, preferring to devote most of his energy to playing music, chasing girls, and smoking marijuana — in the course of his early career, he did manage to sit in on a couple of sessions with Seger, and at age 19 played acoustic guitar and sang backup on “Ramblin’ Gamblin’ Man” from the latter’s Capitol Records debut in 1968.

Frey eventually decided, however, that Detroit wasn’t the place for him to launch a serious career in rock music and headed west to California. He was fortunate enough to make contact with John David Souther, a fellow Detroit transplant who was already a promising practitioner of what would soon be known as country-rock. He was dating Frey’s girlfriend’s sister, and he soon showed Frey how to play and sing country music, which was increasingly making itself felt in the rock music coming out of the Golden State. The two tried composing as a team, even landing a publishing contract that helped keep them going during those lean late-’60s years, splitting 90 dollars a week between them — the publishing deal fell apart through their inability to write the kind of commercial material that was being sought, but in the course of writing together, they also developed a coherent sound that soon became very attractive, and something they could build on.

Thus was born Longbranch Pennywhistle, a country-rock group whose timing was a little premature on a commercial level but not too soon to be signed to Amos Records, a small Los Angeles-based label. The group’s self-titled album, which included Doug Kershaw, as well as Ry Cooder and the renowned L.A. session men James Burton on guitar, Larry Knechtel on piano, and Joe Osborn on bass, never got the promotion it would have taken to make it a success. Souther and Frey kept making the rounds of the folk clubs in the city and the surrounding area, crossing paths with the likes of Jackson Browne — then an ex-member of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band with some great songs to his credit as a composer — and Linda Ronstadt. Eventually, Frey, Souther, and Browne ended up sharing a house together, and the two of them sang on Browne’s demo of “Jamaica Say You Will.” Browne was already being managed by David Geffen, who, at Browne’s urging, also became Frey’s informal music business advisor. Meanwhile, he and Souther were forced to disband their own group in order to get out of the contract with Amos Records, which seemed like a dead end, and both spent a fair amount of time around the Troubadour, the club that constituted the folk-rock mecca for the West Coast. Frey wanted to try forming a new group, but was persuaded instead to consider going on the road backing Linda Ronstadt, who was about to tour in support of the release of her debut Asylum Records album, Silk Purse.

Frey also met Don Henley, who was in a band called Shiloh — which was also signed to Amos Records and also getting nowhere fast — and persuaded him, in the course of their mutual commiserations, to join the band working behind Ronstadt. The ranks of the band, formed in the summer of 1971, eventually came to include Frey and Henley, and Randy Meisner, who’d lately played with Rick Nelson on-stage and on the Rudy the Fifth album, and ex-Flying Burrito Brothers member Bernie Leadon. Within a short time, however, they’d made plans to separate themselves from Ronstadt and go off on their own. After a cold audition — with no advance demo tape — in front of Geffen, they had a manager and, after getting Frey out of his contract with Amos Records, they went to Colorado for some time off. There they worked out who they were and what their sound would be, picked up their first producer, Glyn Johns, took on the name the Eagles, and were signed to Geffen’s newly formed Asylum Records.

Although all four members of the Eagles composed songs and sang, Frey and Henley quickly emerged as the two with the most commercial musical ears, Frey as co-author (with Jackson Browne) and lead singer on their first single, “Take It Easy,” which reached number 12 on the charts in the summer of 1972, and Henley as co-author (with Leadon) of “Witchy Woman,” which got to number nine that fall. Although the group had succeeded in attracting generally favorable press attention and reasonably good sales, with one Top Ten single and a debut album that peaked at number 22 in a seven-week run on the charts, Frey and Henley between them decided that this was not enough, and that their next album would have to be something more than just a body of good tunes and a couple of AM-friendly cuts — between them, they turned what became Desperado into a very ambitious (for the time) thematic-based concept album, which was something relatively unusual in country-rock. Frey and Henley also co-wrote the title track, which was perhaps the finest album track in the group’s history (although it’s arguable that every track on Desperado that didn’t make it onto a 45 fits into that category). Although the concept caught Leadon and Meisner by surprise, especially as songwriters, they quickly came aboard and Desperado ended up being one of the finest records ever to come out of the ’70s country-rock scene.

And it was a measure of the unity that the band still felt at this time that, when Desperado stalled on the charts just outside of the Top 40 and neither of its two singles did better than number 59 — mostly owing to disorganization of Asylum Records at the time, which was being sold and merged with Elektra Records — all of the members took this as a professional affront. Frey’s singing also improved markedly between the first two albums, and he was now effectively, with Henley, the one of two co-equal focal points in the band. By the time of their third album, a fifth Eagle had joined in the guise of Don Felder, whose guitar sound toughened up the band’s overall sound, and especially their harder rock & roll side. By the time he joined, for the On the Border album, which marked a commercial comeback, peaking at number 17, the band had split into two divisions, with Frey and Henley more or less the stable core, while Leadon — who wasn’t entirely happy over Felder’s guitar being added to their sound, when he wanted to play more straight-ahead electric guitar — and Meisner seemed to be part of a less cohesive unit just outside of that core.

By the time they toured in support of their fourth album, One of These Nights, Leadon was on his way out, to be replaced by Joe Walsh, and Meisner followed out the door on the Hotel California tour. By that time, Frey and Henley (in coordination with their manager, Irving Azoff, a protégé of Geffen’s who’d taken the latter’s place when he became too wired up in running his record label), as co-authors of the string of hit singles that included “One of These Nights,” “Lyin’ Eyes,” “Take It to the Limit,” “Hotel California,” “New Kid in Town,” “Life in the Fast Lane,” “The Long Run,” “I Can’t Tell You Why,” and “Heartache Tonight,” and one or the other of them on lead vocals for all but two of those songs, were more or less running things. Walsh, Felder, and new member Timothy B. Schmit stayed along for the ride that continued through 1982, when Frey and Henley, in conjunction with the others — all of whom were now set up financially better than they ever could have dreamed, following a string of arena- and stadium-scale tours, hit singles, and three more multi-million-selling albums — put the group on hiatus. What’s more, the Eagles’ catalog continued to sell for decades after, on LP and CD, in multiple editions of the latter.

Frey began a solo career in 1982 with No Fun Aloud, notching a pair of Top 40 hits with “I Found Somebody” and “The One You Love.” He also embarked on an unexpected acting career in the wake of 1984’s The Allnighter, which spawned the hit “Smuggler’s Blues,” a song that subsequently inspired an episode of the hit TV series Miami Vice on which Frey guest starred; his acting work later continued in an extended guest role on the acclaimed Wiseguy as well as a starring turn in 1993’s South of Sunset, which as a result of its premiere episode’s 6.1 Nielsen rating — believed to be the lowest fall debut in major network history — was canceled after only one episode.

Frey’s solo musical career reached its peak in 1985 with the Top Ten smash “The Heat Is On,” a single from the soundtrack to the Eddie Murphy comedy Beverly Hills Cop. Frey’s contribution to the Miami Vice soundtrack, “You Belong to the City,” was also a blockbuster, narrowly missing the top of the charts. However, his next solo LP, Soul Searchin’, did not follow until 1988, notching only one Top 40 entry, “True Love”; Strange Weather, issued four years later, missed the charts altogether. After issuing Glenn Frey Live in 1993, he joined the reunited Eagles on their phenomenally successful Hell Freezes Over tour, with a live album of the same name reaching number one a year later. Since then, his releases have consisted of compilations of earlier solo work. In the late ’90s, Frey co-founded his own label, Mission Records, with attorney Peter Lopez. Frey returned with his first solo album in some 20 years with 2012’s After Hours, a collection of classic American pop songs done in a kind of pop lounge style, with the title tune, co-written with Jack Tempchin, the only original. ~ Bruce Eder & Jason Ankeny, Rovi